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Abstract

Fast radio bursts (FRBs) are millisecond-duration events thought to originate beyond the Milky Way galaxy. Uncertainty surrounding the burst sources, and their propagation through intervening plasma, has limited their use as cosmological probes. We report on a mildly dispersed (dispersion measure 266.5 ± 0.1 parsecs per cubic centimeter), exceptionally intense (120 ± 30 janskys), linearly polarized, scintillating burst (FRB 150807) that we directly localize to 9 square arc minutes. On the basis of a low Faraday rotation (12.0 ± 0.7 radians per square meter), we infer negligible magnetization in the circum-burst plasma and constrain the net magnetization of the cosmic web along this sightline to <21 nanogauss, parallel to the line-of-sight. The burst scintillation suggests weak turbulence in the ionized intergalactic medium.

Citation

Ravi, V. and Shannon, R. and Bailes, M. and Bannister, K. and Bhandari, S. and Bhat, N. and Burke-Spolaor, S. et al. 2016. The magnetic field and turbulence of the cosmic web measured using a brilliant fast radio burst. Science. 354 (6317): pp. 1249-1252.

We report on the discovery of a new fast radio burst, FRB 150215, with the Parkes radio telescope on 2015 February 15. The burst was detected in real time with a dispersion measure (DM) of 1105.6$\pm$0.8 pc cm^{-3}, a ...

In recent years, millisecond-duration radio signals originating in distant galaxies appear to have been discovered in the so-called fast radio bursts. These signals are dispersed according to a precise physical law and ...

We present a detailed study of the prompt and afterglow emission from Swift GRB 061126 using BAT, XRT,UVOT data and multicolor optical imaging from 10 ground-based telescopes. GRB 061126 was a long burst(T90 ¼ 191 s) with ...